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Xu Yong Negatives, A number of prints from the exhibition of this work at the Galerie Julian Sander are also available in Koln: Galerie Julian Sander GmbH Cäcilienstr. 48 50667 Cologne, Germany +49 (221) 170 50 70 galerie@galeriejuliansander.de Tue. – Fr. 12 – 6pm Sat. 12 – 4 pm.

Xu Yong
Negatives

In 1989, Xu Yong photographed the Tiananmen Square protests in Beijing, China. For 25 years, the negatives have been hidden in his archives in order to prevent censorship by the Chinese government.
Photographer Xu Yong was 35 years old when the student’s protests started in the spring of 1989, triggered by the death of Hú Yàobang, the general secretary of Chinas Communist Party. As the regime held on to its rigid policy amidst the drastic change coming about in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe, Tiananmen Square became the center of the protests. People took it to the streets, demonstrating for democracy and the freedom of the press as much as against corruption and censorship. In the dawn of June 4, the Chinese military ended the protests forcefully.
Among the protesters was Xu Yong who intuitively captured the scenes with his camera. All photographs of the events were strictly censored by the government later on. The images were therefore hidden in his archives for 25 years.
This year, however, for the first time in Germany, a selection of his works has been exhibited at the Darmstädter Tage der Fotografie. Yong decided against processing the images and instead reproduced inverted color negatives which may only be decoded with a smartphone or tablet camera, via the function of inverting color effect to negative, providing us with a surreal, yet unbiased glance at these historic events.
Yong’s main objective was to publish his photographs one day as testimony of the events and to artistically transform its historic significant and political content. Through his negatives we see more than what his photographs show at first sight as they mirror the difficult times of
censorship in China. In 2014, Xu Yong finally published his photographs in a book. However, sales and distribution has been inhibited by the government ever since. Since 2015, a new edition of the book is available, published by Verlag Kettler in Germany.

Galerie Julian Sander is proud to show a selection of works from the series “Negatives“.
Xu Yong will be present on the opening weekend and available for a book-signing on September 4 at 3 pm.

Xu Yong is born 1954 in Shanghai. Lives and works in Beijing, China.

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Yong Xu NEGATIVES (Collector’s edition- few copies available), signed c print include) a text by Markus Schaden, founder of The PhotoBook Museum.: The current decade, only half past, deserves a look to the current score. The photobook has achieved popularity, quality and quantity unexpectedly high dimensions. All the more important content and the digital world calls for and the digital photo book. But maybe the right way is indeed in between. This shows an outstanding concept of the Chinese photographer Xu Yong with his brilliant photobook NEGATIVE! A hybrid between analogy and digital. What demands Xu Yong? The viewer can or must reverse the printed in negative colour photographs with his smartphone and thus becomes a (positive) developers in their own digital darkroom. The theme: politically explosive: The China still taboo recordings of the protests on the Tiananmen Square in Beijing in 1989. Fantastic and pioneering. The photobook has arrived in the new decade. Editions Bessard

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Luo Yang, Zine Collection N° 24 limited edition of 300 copies, with a signed c print.« Girls » has been an ongoing photography project since 2007, and has involved me shooting the girls around me in an attempt in which – through the lens of the camera – to grasp some sense of understanding of their lives. The images included in the « Girls » series charter a period of personal development, with reflections between myself and other girls around me apparent in each shot. Whilst I was growing up, in order relieve myself of loneliness, I tried to find a sense of comfort through the stillness of the photographic image.

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Wake Up! 28 copies is left WOUHA! Han Lei, BeSpoke Collection N°2, Limited to 250 copies with a signed and numbered c-print by the artist, 160mm X 240mm, hard cover,cloth binding and more surprise €46 only …

For the past two years, Han Lei has been experimenting with grating plates to create three-dimensional images; a process the artist finds as intriguing as traditional media such as silver gelatin prints. His enthusiasm for this particular material and his investigation into it diversifies the artist’s understanding of “moving images”, giving birth to more creative […]